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snowseau

💙 your library 🍁

4042 points

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Level 6
British & Irish Classic Literature
Spring 2026 Readalong
My Taste
The Rook (The Checquy Files, #1)
Carry On (Simon Snow, #1)
Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries (Emily Wilde, #1)
Half a Soul (Regency Faerie Tales, #1)
Agnes Aubert's Mystical Cat Shelter
Reading...
Kill the Beast
33%

snowseau entered a giveaway...

3h

Conquest Publishing giveaway

My Thorns For Your Roses

My Thorns For Your Roses

Kristen Argyres

True love takes many forms. As one of the few survivors of her generation, Lark wants to live a quiet, peaceful life. All she needs is a tolerable husband. On her 24th birthday, Lark offends the local faerie lord, the shapeshifter Tamlin, who punishes her with a rose rooted in her flesh. In her efforts to convince Tamlin to undo his handiwork, Lark visits the forest daily and discovers the breathtaking and terrifying wonders of his realm. Despite her pragmatic nature tugging her toward a mortal huntsman, Lark falls for Tamlin. After a near-fatal accident exposes Tamlin’s cruel deception, Lark moves to the capital to accept a marriage of convenience. Yet when she learns of Tamlin’s capture, Lark must choose whether to secure her future or risk it all to save the love of her life from his cannibal ex. -- MY THORNS FOR YOUR ROSES is a "Tam Lin" retelling written in the spirit of the Scottish faerie tale and folksong - for readers who enjoyed the fae in Heather Fawcett's EMILY WILDE series, retellings like Naomi Novik's SPINNING SILVER, and the complicated family dynamics of Kell Woods' AFTER THE FOREST and UPON A STARLIT TIDE. Book cover artist: Yinan Sun (Grey)

ebook • 75 advanced reader copies • everywhere

snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum

3h
  • Would you rather…?

    I am sick, so I made this! Some of these are supposed to be hard, some are genuinely only about preference. All lighthearted of course, don’t take them TOO seriously (unless it would be funny to do so)

    1. Would you rather read 🛖in a lonely cabim infested with spiders or 🏢standing up on a busy sidewalk where you keep being bumped into and run danger of having things spilled on you and your book?
    2. Would you rather 😍love a book that everyone else hates with a passion or 🙄hate a book that everyone else loves with a passion?
    3. Would you rather 🔮know the ending of every book you read from now on as soon as you read past the third chapter or 🤔struggle to fully understand every single ending unless you have someone explain it to you or look it up?
    4. Would you rather have dinner with ✍️your favorite author or 🥸your favorite character?
    5. Would you rather have your favorite book turned into a screen adaptation that 🌇is wildly inaccurate but incredibly good in its own way, or 🌃is incredibly faithful but still bad in pretty much every other way (acting, editing, effects, colour, costuming, …)?
    6. For the next five years, Would you rather only be able to read 🎵booktok™ books or ✖️books from your least favorite two genres?
    7. For the next year, Would you rather 🤖only read books generated with AI or 🤓have listen to a litfic bro™ explain to you why every genre but litfic is not real literature every time you start a new book?
    8. Would you rather be 🕴️be kidnapped by a hot mafia billionaire or 👽abducted by a hot alien?
    9. Would you rather 🔜only be a able to read books published from this very second onward or 🔙only be able to read books published up until this very second?
    10. Would you rather read ❓a series that ends on a cliffhanger and the author has no intention of finishing it or ❗️a story that ends with no happy ending for no narrative reason other than shock value?

    Feel free to elaborate on some or all (or not at all) on why you chose the way you did & to add other tricky questions in the comments, I’m curious to see what pagebound thinks 🫶

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  • snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum

    3h
  • Namesake Books 🫵🏽

    Hello all !! I was in a local bookshop today and found the gem of a lifetime ! A book named after me !!! Now for some people, this is old news. But for my BIPOC friends out there … the struggle is real. So imagine my surprise when I look over the vintage classics & see Ayesha, The Return of She by H. Rider Haggard; a 1905 gothic-fantasy novel ?!? I couldn’t believe my eyes !! And then it got me wondering… there are thousands of books on this planet, could there be one for you too ??

    SO: do you have a namesake book? Have you read it/would you read it? Is it out there but you haven’t discovered it yet?

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  • snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum

    3h
  • Hilariously Titled Books

    There’s a recent thread about age gap books And I was just scrolling through it and someone mentioned a book titled “Your Dad Will Do” and I’m not gonna lie I almost laughed so hard I cried. It’s just such a hilarious title for a book to me. I don’t care for regular romances and I don’t care for age gaps but I may actually read this book simply for the title.

    What hilariously titled books have you stumbled upon?

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  • snowseau made progress on...

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    Kill the Beast

    Kill the Beast

    Serra Swift

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    snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum

    14h
  • Does it matter for you to know something about author of the book?

    Hey, guys... I've been wondering lately if you need to know at least a few basic pieces of information about the author of the book you are reading, or if you're more interested in the literary piece the author has written. I've been watching one book review on youtube and the book (2023 urban fantasy) is written by an author who works under a pseudonym, and it seems like nobody knows much about the author (not even the real name) and for some it's important to know at least something and others in the comments of the video were like: "I liked the book the author had written so what's the deal?" I can also say that if i am reading a classic literary piece, it's important for me to know the historical context and that includes the biography of the author (usually the biography is something that helps me to understand the book more). But to be honest, if i am reading contemporary fiction i usually don't really care about the author... maybe it depends on what kind of genre the book is. What do you think?

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    Kill the Beast

    Kill the Beast

    Serra Swift

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    snowseau started reading...

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    Kill the Beast

    Kill the Beast

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    snowseau entered a giveaway...

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    Sourcebooks giveaway

    How to Kill a Witch: The Patriarchy's Guide to Silencing Women

    How to Kill a Witch: The Patriarchy's Guide to Silencing Women

    Zoe Venditozzi & Claire Mitchell

    Nothing brings people together like a common enemy, and witches were the greatest enemy of all. Scotland, 1563: Crops failed. People starved. And the Devil's influence was stronger than ever—at least, that's what everyone believed. If you were a woman living in Scotland during this turbulent time, there was a very good chance that you, or someone you knew, would be tried as a witch. During the chaos of the Reformation, violence against women was codified for the first time in the Witchcraft Act—a tool of theocratic control with one chilling to root out witches and rid the land of evil. What followed was a dark and misogynistic chapter in history that fanned the flames of witch hunts across the globe, including in the United States and beyond. In How to Kill a Witch, Zoe Venditozzi and Claire Mitchell, hosts of the popular Witches of Scotland podcast, unravel the grim yet absurdly bureaucratic process of identifying, accusing, trying, and executing women as witches. With sharp wit and keen feminist insight, they reveal the inner workings of a patriarchal system designed to weaponize fear and oppress women. This captivating (and often infuriating) account, which weaves a rich tapestry of trial transcripts, witness accounts, and the documents that set the legal grounds for the witch hunts, exposes how this violent period of history mirrors today's struggles for justice and equality. How to Kill a Witch is a powerful, darkly humorous reminder of the dangers of superstition, bias, and ignorance, and a warning to never forget the past… while raising the question of whether it could ever happen again.

    print • 10 copies • US & Canada

    snowseau entered a giveaway...

    1d

    Sourcebooks Landmark giveaway

    The Mad Wife

    The Mad Wife

    Meagan Church

    From bestselling author Meagan Church comes a haunting exploration of identity, motherhood, and the suffocating grip of societal expectations that will leave you questioning the lives we build―and the lies we live.  They called it hysteria. She called it survival. Lulu Mayfield has spent the last five years molding herself into the perfect 1950s housewife. Despite the tragic memories that haunt her and the weight of exhausting expectations, she keeps her husband happy, her household running, and her gelatin salads the talk of the neighborhood. But after she gives birth to her second child, Lulu's carefully crafted life begins to unravel. When a new neighbor, Bitsy, moves in, Lulu suspects that something darker lurks behind the woman's constant smile. As her fixation on Bitsy deepens, Lulu is drawn into a web of unsettling truths that threaten to expose the cracks in her own life. The more she uncovers about Bitsy, the more she questions everything she thought she knew―and soon, others begin questioning her sanity. But is Lulu truly losing her mind? Or is she on the verge of discovering a reality too terrifying to accept? In the vein of The Bell Jar and The Hours, The Mad Wife weaves domestic drama with psychological suspense, so poignant and immersive, you won't want to put it down.

    print • 10 copies • US & Canada

    snowseau wrote a review...

    2d
  • The Sirens
    snowseau
    Mar 08, 2026
    3.0
    Enjoyment: 2.5Quality: 3.0Characters: 2.5Plot: 3.0
    🧜‍♀️
    🌊
    ⚓

    I didn't really develop any thoughts about this book while listening to it. It's not like what I would normally choose to read, and I found the characters to be distant. I couldn't make a connection with any of them, which made it hard to care about any of the stories. I think I would have preferred more from Mary and Eliza's story, but that's because I'm biased toward historical fiction. The audiobook narrator did a great job.

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    The Sirens

    The Sirens

    Emilia Hart

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    snowseau made progress on...

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    The Sirens

    The Sirens

    Emilia Hart

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    snowseau wrote a review...

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  • Blood Over Bright Haven
    snowseau
    Mar 06, 2026
    5.0
    Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 5.0
    ⌨️
    📜
    📚

    I knew people love this book, but I wasn't expecting to also love it this much. The magic system on its own is so unique and intriguing, but then combined with the political narrative? 👌👌 The characters were so well-writen, they felt like real people who could exist today; they felt like people I have met before. I know I'll definitely be rereading this one sometime (I also very much recommend the audiobook)

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  • snowseau finished a book

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    Blood Over Bright Haven

    Blood Over Bright Haven

    M.L. Wang

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    Blood Over Bright Haven

    Blood Over Bright Haven

    M.L. Wang

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    Blood Over Bright Haven

    Blood Over Bright Haven

    M.L. Wang

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